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Vietnam Freight Transport Report Q3 2007Product Type: Market Research ReportPublished by: Business Monitor International Published: August 2007 Product Code: R302-2040 Description Australia’s Qantas Airways said at the end of April that it had agreed to buy 30% of Pacific Airlinesfrom the Vietnamese government. Qantas said it had signed a deal with Vietnam's State Capital Investment Corp. to partner in managing the airline and developing it as a low-cost carrier alongside its Jetstar operations. Separately Vietnam was expected to issue new regulations allowing foreigners to own up to 49% of local airlines, according to reports in May. In May 2006, the legislature passed an Aviation Law allowing locals and foreigners to participate in air transport operations in the country. ‘A new decree on the law’s implementation which provides detailed guidelines on foreign ownership in domestic aviation activities is expected to be approved by the prime minister later this year’, an official at the Civil Aviation Administration of Vietnam said. Taking these developments into consideration, along with the growth of demand, BMI’s newly-released Vietnam Freight Transport report concludes that airfreight traffic will increase by an annual average of 12.0% in 2007-2011, measured in tonnes per km. A number of factors underpin our optimism. One is the realistic prospect of a long export-led boom in Vietnam, with GDP growth likely to average 8.4% in 2007-2011, up from 7.8% in the preceding five-year period. Vietnam Airlines is poised for strong growth. Infrastructure plans are also ambitious. The government has announced plans to build the country’s largest airport at Long Thanh in the southern province of Dong Nai, at an estimated cost of US$8bn. Noi Bai International in Hanoi will also be modernised, with a new runway and the enlargement of the cargo terminal. Our overall outlook for the nascent freight transport industry across the different modes is bullish. In road haulage, we have trimmed our forecast to take account the effects of high oil prices and continuing infrastructure bottlenecks. But we still see road-freight turnover running ahead of the general rate of economic expansion in Vietnam. We see it growing by an annual average of 10.8% over the next five years, followed closely by maritime freight (10.4%), pipeline throughput (9.7%) and rail (9.3%). Full World Trade Organisation (WTO) membership, achieved in early 2007, can be seen as supportive of greater freight transport turnover relative to GDP across all modes, particularly so for shipping. We now expect total freight carried growth across all modes, measured in million tonne-km (mntkm), to average 10.2% per annum in 2007-2011. Under BMI’s freight transport business environment rating system, Vietnam achieves a composite score of 43 out of a potential maximum of 70. Vietnam’s stronger points are freight growth, transport infrastructure growth and the transport intensity index, which measures the dynamism of the country’s foreign trade. BMI views Vietnam as being weaker in the other four categories: economic and political long-term risks and the country’s regulatory and competitive environment (corruption is a particular problem). According to our latest estimates, the total value of transport and communications GDP will rise to US$5.3bn in nominal terms by 2011, representing 4.3% of Vietnam’s GDP. Table of Contents
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